Affiliation:
1. Peter Osypka Institute of Medical Engineering, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Medical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of Applied Sciences Offenburg, Germany
2. Bio-Inspired Information Processing, Munich School of Bioengineering, Technical of University Munich, Germany
Abstract
Users of a cochlear implant (CI) in one ear, who are provided with a hearing aid (HA) in the contralateral ear, so-called bimodal listeners, are typically affected by a constant and relatively large interaural time delay offset due to differences in signal processing and differences in stimulation. For HA stimulation, the cochlear travelling wave delay is added to the processing delay, while for CI stimulation, the auditory nerve fibers are stimulated directly. In case of MED-EL CI systems in combination with different HA types, the CI stimulation precedes the acoustic HA stimulation by 3 to 10 ms. A self-designed, battery-powered, portable, and programmable delay line was applied to the CI to reduce the device delay mismatch in nine bimodal listeners. We used an A-B-B-A test design and determined if sound source localization improves when the device delay mismatch is reduced by delaying the CI stimulation by the HA processing delay (τHA). Results revealed that every subject in our group of nine bimodal listeners benefited from the approach. The root-mean-square error of sound localization improved significantly from 52.6° to 37.9°. The signed bias also improved significantly from 25.2° to 10.5°, with positive values indicating a bias toward the CI. Furthermore, two other delay values (τHA –1 ms and τHA +1 ms) were applied, and with the latter value, the signed bias was further reduced in some test subjects. We conclude that sound source localization accuracy in bimodal listeners improves instantaneously and sustainably when the device delay mismatch is reduced.
Funder
MED-EL Elektromedizinische Geraete Gesellschaft Deutschland GmbH
MED-EL Elektromedizinische Geraete Gesellschaft m.b.H.
Subject
Speech and Hearing,Otorhinolaryngology
Cited by
10 articles.
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